Feral Jundi

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Books: Patriot Pirates by Robert H. Patton

Filed under: Books,History — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:57 PM

 

     I got a chance to read through this book at Barnes and Noble the other day.  I am not a Revolutionary War history buff or anything, but as a security contractor, I was certainly intrigued.  If Max Weber was to read this book, he would have ‘crapped nickels’. LOL

   Bottom line, thanks to these privateers or private naval companies, we were able to fight the British on the high seas.  And guess what, we made fighting the British a profitable venture for these PNC’s through ‘legalized piracy’.  Crazy.  Can you imagine if the US gave a company like Blackwater a ‘letter of marque‘ and said ‘we can’t pay you, but if you attack Somali pirates for us, you can keep all the plundered goods’?

    The one thing this book brings up, that has some parallels to today’s private contractors, is the concept of profitable patriotism.  Patriotism in itself is a good thing, but who says you cannot be a patriot, and make some good money in the process?  It’s the American way, as this book has so blatantly pointed out.                Although I think privateering might not be that popular of an idea in today’s politically correct world. But combining patriotism and profitability can and should be a concept we should not frown upon, and it is a combination that can be incredibly effective if regulated by the state properly.  World War 2 and the military industry, pulled us out of the depths of despair after the Great Depression–don’t tell me some factories did not make some profit off of that war? Or the massive reconstruction contracts after that war?  KBR eat your heart out. 

     And by regulation, I mean making sure that the laws are followed, as well as the contracts, yet still allowing for the free market to dictate the ebb and flow of the industry.  And with globalization, regulation amongst the companies for this war, is increasingly difficult.  As America puts more regulation on it’s own  industry, and yet is unable to impact the global industry with the same regulations, then that is where we hinder our free market efficiency for this war.  It is a problem that impacts most industry out there, and ours is not immune to this. –Head Jundi

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http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/512%2BNYJ5%2BjL._SS500_.jpg

 

From Publishers Weekly

Patton (The Pattons: A Personal History of an American Family) turns his attention to an often overlooked aspect of the Revolutionary War: maritime privateering, or legalized piracy. Patton is careful to distinguish the mixed motives of these patriot pirates, for often there was less patriotism than simple greed. Nevertheless, their work fulfilled George Washington’s strategic aim to win the war by exhausting Britain into giving up the struggle. In what Patton terms a massive seaborne insurgency that dwarfed the efforts of the colonists’ small navy, thousands of privateers nettled British shipping, sometimes gaining vast fortunes. Privateering also turned into a handy political issue when Benjamin Franklin, the American representative in France, succeeded in persuading his hosts to allow Yankee skippers to sell their booty in French ports—a breach of the country’s neutrality that aggravated diplomatic tensions, as Franklin knew it would, and helped cement Paris’s commitment to American independence. Patton gives an absorbing exhumation of an undersung subject that will be of particular interest to Revolution buffs. (May 20) 

Buy the Book Here

Maritime Security: How to Deal With Pirates

Filed under: Maritime Security,Somalia — Tags: , , — Matt @ 12:01 PM

“Steer the hostile prow to Barb’ry’s shores,” wrote an anonymous poet, a veteran of the Battle of

Bunker Hill, “release thy sons, and humble Africa’s power.”

 

      Finally, some voice of reason out there.  The only way Somali pirates will stop doing what they are doing, is to fight them.  If we keep paying them off, and continue this policy of not fighting them, then they will only continue to do it.  And what do you know, piracy has only gotten worse in that region.  So whom ever these so-called experts are, that continue to give shipping companies this advice of not fighting back and just paying them off, have done more to increase piracy in that region than anything else. And it seems we have learned this lesson before in the past. –Head Jundi  

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NOVEMBER 22, 2008

How to Deal With Pirates

By MICHAEL B. OREN

The rise of piracy is threatening international trade and raising complex questions. The only way to end the scourge is to respond aggressively, says Michael B. Oren.

The attack began when an unidentified vessel drew alongside a merchant ship in the open sea and heavily armed brigands stormed aboard. “They made signs for us all to go forward,” one of the frightened crewmen remembered, “assuring us in several languages that if we did not obey their commands they would massacre us all.” The sailors were then stripped of all valuables and most of their clothing and locked in the hull of their own captured ship. They would be held in unspeakable conditions, subsisting on eight ounces of bread a day and threatened with beating and even beheading should they resist. “Death would be a great relief and more welcome than the continuance of our present situation,” one of the prisoners lamented.

(more…)

News: US Renews Appeal to Iran on Missing American

Filed under: Iran,News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:24 AM

US renews appeal to Iran on missing American

November 21, 2008

WASHINGTON (AP) — The State Department has renewed an appeal to Iran for information about a former FBI agent, Floridian Robert Levinson, who went missing in Iranian territory 20 months ago.

Spokesman Sean McCormack said Friday that Iran has not responded to a recent request through Swiss intermediaries about Levinson. He was last seen on Iran’s Kish island in March 2007. Iran said previously it has no information about him. McCormack said the U.S. believes Iranian authorities can still help.

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., introduced a resolution Thursday asking Congress and U.S. allies to press Iran on the case. Levinson’s wife, Christine, visited the country last year to learn more about his disappearance but got no new information. She met last week with a senior State Department official.

Levinson’s Web site

Story Here

Legal News: SOFA- Prosecuting Contractors for Previous Incidents?

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News,News — Tags: , , — Matt @ 12:02 AM

     Boy, so the paragraph that jumps up at me in this article, is this one:

 But the question of whether Iraqis could use the agreement to prosecute contractors for previous incidents wasn’t addressed in the new agreement. When security company officials asked Thursday, “We told them that’s a question we don’t know the answer to,” said a State Department official, who spoke to reporters about the meetings under the condition of anonymity.

     My guess is that they do know the answer, and they have been withholding that information to insure there wasn’t any real protest by the companies.  Especially Blackwater, because if the Iraqis can go back in time and prosecute contractors for previous incidents, well then that will cause a stampede of litigation.  Obviously the Iraqis would want to go after those implicated in the Nisour Square incident as the first case.  But where would it stop, and how far will they go back?  This smells.  

   To me, I think the companies were pretty much in wait and see mode, with what they ‘thought’ was the SOFA. Hell, I even posted the copy that was released over at Fox News.  But if this paragraph up top is an indicator of the holes in this thing, then I think all of us in this industry deserve a full explanation of what really is going to happen?  And why is there an Arabic draft available only to Iraqi lawmakers, yet no official copy of the final draft in English for the rest of us to read?  

   The other thing that gets me, is that the companies should not be surprised about anything.  If they would have had the guts to confront the client about this matter, and demand to be included in the loop, then we wouldn’t be playing this guessing game right now.  How many of us have died in defense of the client/Coalition? There are 230,000 plus civilian contractors in this world wide war, and we continue to be treated like the elephant in the room that no one wants to acknowledge. –Head Jundi

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Elephant in the Room

US-Iraq Pact Ends Contractor Immunity

November 21, 2008

Knight Ridder

WASHINGTON – Contractors working for the United States in Iraq, including armed security outfits such as Blackwater Inc., will be subject to Iraqi law under the new U.S.-Iraq security pact. Not only that, they could face Iraqi prosecution for acts committed when they supposedly had immunity from Iraqi law, U.S. officials said Nov. 20.

A new U.S.-Iraq security agreement doesn’t specifically prevent Iraqi officials from bringing criminal charges retroactively in cases such as the September 2007 shooting deaths of 17 Iraqi civilians by contractors protecting a State Department convoy, officials told security company officials during meetings in Washington Thursday.

The news caught company officials by surprise.

“We are still trying to make sense of it,” said Anne E. Tyrrell, a spokeswoman for Blackwater Inc., whose security guards have been involved in some of the most controversial incidents in Iraq, including the Sept. 16, 2007, shooting at al Nisoor Square in Baghdad.

(more…)

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Jobs: Force Protection Specialist, Israel

Filed under: Israel,Jobs — Tags: , , — Matt @ 11:30 PM

 

Title: Force Protection Specialist

Location: Intl – Israel

Req Number: SD-PA-HQ-11266

Position Description:

Title: Force Protection Specialist

Location: Intl – Israel

Req Number:

Position Description:

The Israeli program has several duties and responsibilities in accordance with providing armed protective services to current U.S. Military assets as those assets assist in stabilizing the region. Force Protection duties include 24 hour protection of personnel, equipment and facilities. Controlling access to classified assets and patrolling perimeters to secure Military compounds.

(more…)

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